Math 361, Spring 2016, Assignment 8
From cartan.math.umb.edu
Carefully define the following terms, then give one example and one non-example of each:
- ($F$-)linear combination (of elements of a vector space $V$ with scalars from $F$).
- ($F$-)span (of a subset of a vector space).
- ($F$-)linear relation (among elements of $V$).
- ($F$-)linearly independent set.
- ($F$-)basis.
- Dimension (of a vector space over $F$).
- Dimension (of a field extension $F\rightarrow E$).
- Degree (of a field extension).
- Degree (of an algebraic element).
Carefully state the following theorems (you do not need to prove them):
- Theorem concerning extension of linearly independent sets to bases.
- Theorem concerning refinement of spanning sets to bases.
- Theorem relating the cardinalities of two bases for the same vector space.
- Theorem concerning the orders of finite fields.
- Theorem relating algebraic elements to finite-dimensional subextensions.
- Dimension theorem.
Solve the following problems:
- Section 30, problems 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9.
- Let $F$ denote the field $\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2})$, the smallest subfield of $\mathbb{R}$ containing $\mathbb{Q}$ and $\sqrt[3]{2}$.
- (a) Compute the dimension of $F$ when regarded as a vector space over $\mathbb{Q}$.
- (b) Show that the polynomial $x^2-2$ has no roots in $F$. (Hint: use the Dimension Theorem.)
- (c) Compute $[\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{2},\sqrt[3]{2}):\mathbb{Q}]$.
- (d) Find an explicit basis for $\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{2},\sqrt[3]{2})$, regarded as a vector space over $\mathbb{Q}$. Then give several sample calculations in this field.
Questions:
- Under definitions, #7 seems to be an elaboration or special case of #6, and #8 seems to be just another name for the phenomenon resulting from the two. Am I mistaken, or is consolidation of the definitions acceptable, or would you rather have specific examples illustrating the situations in which each term would arise? *cough* -IB (talk) 14:03, 28 March 2016 (EDT)
- You're correct. #7 is a special case of #6, and #8 is identical to #7. No need for separate examples in #7 and #8 (though it would be nice to give an example for #6 that shows it's a more general concept than #7). -Steven.Jackson (talk) 14:19, 28 March 2016 (EDT)
Solutions:
Vocab
- 1. Suppose $S\subseteq V$. A linear combination of elements of $S$ is a vector that can be written as the sum of scalar multiples of elements of $S$. That is, for vectors $v_i\in S$, vector $w$ can be written
- $c_1\cdot v_1+\ldots + c_i\cdot v_i$ for scalars $c_i$ if and only if $w$ is a linear combination of those elements in $S$. ::* The zero vector is a linear combination of any nonempty subset of any vector space. Set all $c_i$ to the zero element of the field, and the sum becomes a sum of zero vectors, which is the zero vector. ::* If $S$ is the singleton corresponding to the zero vector, any nonzero vector in $V$ is not a linear combination of elements of $S$ (Prove these - they seem a bit too obvious (or find better examples)) :2. The ''span'' of a subset $S\subseteq V$ is the set of all possible linear combinations of elements of $S$. ::* ::* :3. A ''linear relation'' of a subset $S\subseteq V$ is an ordered set of scalars which, when multiplied with their respective vectors in $S$ and those resulting vectors are added, the sum is the zero vector.
- N.B. The relation where all the scalars are the zero element is the trivial relation
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